Tanzania's albinos are
being 'hunted down like animals' as greed for money and influence drives
families to turn on their own loved ones in a trade allegedly fuelled by some
of the country's most powerful people. It is believed albino body parts will
bring a person wealth, or luck - and for that, people are willing to pay as
much as $3,000 or $4,000 for a limb, or as much as $75,000 - about £50,000 -
for the 'full set', a whole body.

People with albinism are regularly attacked by people who chop
their limbs off - an act which either leaves them severely mutilated, or
dead.

Albinism, a hereditary genetic condition which causes a total
absence of pigmentation in the skin, hair and eyes, affects one Tanzanian in
1,400, often as a result of inbreeding in remote and rural communities, experts
say. In the West, it affects just one person in 20,000.

Since people began collecting records of the attacks, there have
been 74 killings and 59 survivors of attacks. Even the dead are not safe:
16 graves have been robbed.

And these are only the recorded cases.

The most recent case saw four-year-old Pendo Emmanuelle Nundi
abducted from her home in December.

Her father and uncle were both arrested in connection with her
disappearance, but - despite rewards offered of £1,130 and promises of swift
action from the police - she has not been found.

Charities working in the area do not hold out much hope she will be
returned safely, but - listening to survivors' stories - it is likely her end
is, or will be brutal.

Mwigulu Matonange was just 10 when he was attacked by two men as
he walked home from school with a friend.

They chopped off his left arm, before disappearing back into the
jungle with their 'prize'.

'I was held down like a goat about to be slaughtered,' he told IPP Media after
the February 2014 attack.

In Mwigulu's case, the two men were strangers: he had never seen
them before.

But it is understood suspicion turned on Pendo's father after he
took half-an-hour to report her abduction, despite there being neighbours who
could have helped as soon as she was taken.

It is not just parents. A 38-year-old woman with albinism was
attacked with machetes by her husband and four other men while she was sleeping
in February 2013, according to a UN report.

Her eight-year-old daughter watched her father leave the bedroom
carrying her mother's arm.

Those living with albinism in Tanzania fear the lure of making a
couple of hundred dollars - three times the minimum wage earned in the country
- is placing them in danger, even from their own families.

'Now we can see the parents who are involved in planning the
attacks. What kind of war are we fighting if parents and family do
this? Who can we trust?' Josephat Torner, who campaigns for albino rights,
asked.

'You do not know who is your enemy.'

Josephat, who himself is albino, added: 'People with the albinism
are being hunted and killed for our body parts. It is because people want to
become rich.

'We are still living in danger. It is because people, they have
different ideas. Some people, they are thinking they should get our body parts
and sell to different places.

'The question is, why? Why now? And who is behind the killings?'

Exactly who remains unknown.

But Josephat - who has received death threats for his work, and
was attacked in 2012 - said: 'The big fishes are behind the issue. It has
been really a big discussion. If I say big fish, or big people, it is those who
have enough resources, enough money.

'People sell the body parts for high prices. So it is not really
small fish behind it.

'It could be politicians. It could be those people.'

There are, campaigners know, times when more albino attacks take
place. And they know, with the general election coming up in October, now is
one of the most dangerous times to be an albino.

The UN warned political campaigners were turning to witch doctors
to help them win election back in August.

'People with albinism are hiding while there are elections,' said
Peter.

Josephat added: 'This year we are going to have an election. Since
last year, we have been seeing attacks and killings.'

Already, there has been a noticeable increase.

Over the course of just 11 days last year, there were three
attacks and two attempted attacks on people with albinism in Tanzania.

One man, thought to be in his early 20s, was found lying dead, his
body mutilated, in the grass by some schoolchildren in a suburb of Dar Es
Salaam.

The next day, a mother-of-seven was attacked in the Tabora region
of Tanzania, losing her arm.

A few days before, 15-year-old Pendo Sengerema was attacked as she
ate dinner at home with her family.

They hacked off her right arm just below the elbow, before running
off into the dark.

According to Under the Same Sun, a witch doctor had received an
order from a wealthy client indicating that if Pendo’s arm could be provided,
it would garner a price of $600.

The attack left Pendo terrified, begging to be sent away from her
village.

'I am asking the police to move me to a safer place and protect me
because bad men might come back to kill me,' she pleaded.

These 'safer places' are the centres set up around the country,
where large number of people with albinism are living behind high walls for
their own protection.

The camps were established after the first high profile waves of
attacks, a knee-jerk response to a terrifying situation.

'It was supposed to be a short term solution,' Peter said. 'But
there was no long term plan.'

Years later, they still exist - and now are not just for children:
adults are kept behind the camps' high walls as well.

'Children who are there, they are living there maybe for seven
years without going back to their families,' said Josephat.

'At the end of the day, families or communities do not want to
allow them to go back. These children are growing up without any parental
care.'

'If you ask the community why now are they forcing their children
to the camps, they are saying it is where they belong. But we are not for the
camps: we are for the community.'